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Personal Finance

— Building wealth and financial literacy
31 members Created Jun 2026

Why I keep my investment thesis simple: broad market, low cost, stay the course

The difference between 0.03% (VTI) and 0.50% (a typical actively managed domestic equity fund) seems tiny. Let me show you why it isn't.

Starting with $50,000, contributing $500/month for 35 years, at 7% average annual return:

  • 0.03% expense ratio: approximately $1,082,000
  • 0.50% expense ratio: approximately $990,000

That's $92,000 lost to a fee difference of 0.47%. And that's assuming the active fund matches the index fund's gross return, which on average it doesn't.

The practical takeaway: when evaluating any fund, the expense ratio is the one number that is completely predictable. High-fee funds need to consistently outperform low-fee funds just to break even. The data says they generally don't.

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